October 25 2011, Eric Ramsey
Day 4 was a short one at the PokerStars.it European Poker Tour San Remo. It only took about seven hours to shrink the field from 64 players to 24. Canada’s Chris McClung came into the day atop the pack, and his lead only continued to balloon over the course of the four levels. At the end of the night, he had 3.148 million chips in his bag, and that was good enough to give him more than 150 big blinds and a lead of about a million chips over his nearest challenger. With 837 players in the starting field, McClung holds about one eighth of the 25 million chips in play.
Joseph Cheong was within striking distance of McClung to start play, and he enjoyed a good increase over the first few levels. Very late in the day, though, Cheong was demolished and his chips were absorbed by McClung in a huge pot. In the 3k/10k/20k level, McClung three-bet a raise from Mustapha Kanit, and Cheong made a cold four-bet to 220,000. Kanit folded, but McClung went ahead and shoved all-in for about a million.
The call came instantly, and McClung’s measly had been picked off. Cheong rolled over
, and he was a huge favorite to drag the big double up and the chip-leading pot. But the dealer provided the kiss of death. The board fell
, and the flush on the turn sealed Cheong’s demise during the last level of the night.
Also falling short of very deep runs were two of the four Team PokerStars Pros who had made Day 4. Vanessa Selbst was the first of the crew to be sent off. She was unable to get anything going with her middling stack, and she ended up more-or-less committing herself with on queen-high board. Alessio Isaia’s
had turned two pair, and that was the end of the line for one of the last remaining ladies in the field. Shortly thereafter, John Duthie, founder and creator of the EPT, was eliminated with
. He was short when he shoved preflop, and Christopher Williamsson found
to tally the knockout on a
board.
That leaves Lex Veldhuis and Johnny Lodden to carry the torch for the Team, and both men had productive sessions on the felt.
Their advance came despite the fact that they were seated next to each other for the bulk of the day, and poker fans are hoping they’ll keep on sharing space all the way into the final table. Lodden managed to double with kings against Cheong’s ace-king around dinner time on Day 4, and he bagged up 1.227 million chips to end the day. On his left, Veldhuis seemed to be pacing himself against the active table, and after not much chip movement, he finished with 877,000.
Other notables still in the mix include Barny Boatman, Kevin MacPhee, Mike McDonald, Alessio Isaia, and the new WSOPE Main Event champion, Elio Fox. It’s quite a lineup with just 24 players left, and there are still a couple of former champions (MacPhee, McDonald) with a shot at becoming the EPT’s first double Main Event champion. They and the rest of the 24 will return to the Casino di San Remo at 1400 CET (0500 PDT) on Wedesday to play down to the final table.
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2011 January 17, Chad Holloway
On Sunday, the final six players of the 2011 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $5,000 Bounty Shootout returned for the $213,000 winner-take-all finale. It took nearly twelve hours to determine a winner, which ended up being none other than Canadian Andrew Chen. While Chen took home $269,000 for his performance, he didn’t come by it easily.
The final table at the start of the day was about as tough as they come. Joining Chen were William Pilossoph, Scott Baumstein, Marko Neumann, Shaun Deeb, and Michael Binger. All eyes seemed to be on Binger, who played heads up for nearly five hours in Round One only to face off against his brother, Nick, in Round Two. Not only did Binger win that table, he personally eliminated his brother on his way to victory.
The first elimination of the day didn’t take place until after seven hours of play. It occurred when Pilossoph checked, Chen bet 7,000 under the gun, Deeb called, and Pilossoph check-raised all in for 42,000 more on a flop. Chen called with
while Deeb got out of the way. Pilossoph was way behind with
and couldn’t improve as the board ran out the
and
.
Eventually, Neumann followed Pilossoph out the door in fifth place. After a couple more hours of play, Scott Baumstein hit the rail in fourth place. Perhaps the defining hand of the tournament happened shortly thereafter when Deeb raised to 10,000 on the button and Chen reraised to 25,000 from the big blind. Deeb pushed back to the tune of 55,500, Chen moved all in, and Deeb called for 156,300.
Chen:
Deeb:
The pot swelled to 427,600 and was the biggest pot of the tournament. The flop was no help to Deeb and neither was the
turn. In order to eliminate Chen, Deeb needed a ten on the river; unfortunately for him, the
fell and Chen doubled to 427,600.
A few hands later, Binger raised to 10,000, Chen three-bet to 25,000 from the small blind, and Deeb moved all in for right around 25,000 from the big blind. Binger thought for a bit and had an interesting decision on his hands. He couldn’t let Chen eliminate Deeb because then he would be out of the running for the $25,000 bounty bonus. Binger decided to make the call and the action was three ways to the flop, which came down . To make a long story short, Binger ended up all in on the hand and the cards were turned up:
Chen:
Binger:
Deeb:
The on the turn gave Chen the flush, the double elimnation, and the tournament. Congratulations to all the winners and especially to Andrew Chen, your 2011 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $5,000 Bounty Shootout champion!
Final Table Results
1st | Chen | 6 | $269,000 |
2nd | Binger | 6 | $56,000 |
3rd | Deeb | 8 | $83,000 |
4th | Baumstein | 7 | $57,000 |
5th | Neumann | 5 | $55,000 |
6th | Pilossoph | 4 | $54,000 |
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